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Cavafy, C. P.. The complete poems of Cavafy. [tr.by]: Rae Dalven · Introduction W. H. Auden. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1961. 234p. Original title: (Selected works) Language: English Subject: Literature - Poetry
Notes: At the pagination given below, there are pages numbered in latin (xv).
On "Stratis Tsirkas" collection.
Contents: p. vii: Introduction by W. H. Auden - p. 3: Desires - p. 4: Voices - p. 5: Supplication - p. 6: The first step - p. 7: An old man in the café - p. 8: Candles - p. 9: Thermopylae - p. 10: Chè fece… il gran rifiuto - p. 11: The souls of the old men - p. 12: Interruption - p. 13: The windows - p. 14: Trojans - p. 15: Footsteps - p. 16: Monotony - p. 17: Walls - p. 18: Expecting for the barbarians - p. 20: Infidelity - p. 21: The funeral of Sarpedon - p. 23: Dionysus and his crew - p. 24: The horses of Achilles - p. 25: He is the man - p. 26: King Demetrius - p. 27: The city - p. 28: Satrapy - p. 29: The ides of March - p. 30: The god forsakes Antony - p. 31: Finalities - p. 32: Ionian song - p. 33: Sculptor of Tyana - p. 34: Perilous things - p. 35: The glory of the Ptolemies - p. 36: Ithaka - p. 38: Herod of Attica - p. 39: Philhellene - p. 40: Alexandrian kings - p. 42: In church - p. 43: Return - p. 44: As much as you can - p. 45: Very seldom - p. 46: I went - p. 47: Of the shop - p. 48: The grave of the grammarian Lysias - p. 49: Far off - p. 50: The grave of Eurion - p. 51: Chandelier - p. 52: Theodotus - p. 53: But wise men perceive approaching things - p. 54: Morning sea - p. 55: At the café entrance - p. 56: Orophernes - p. 58: He swears - p. 59: On painting - p. 60: One night - p. 61: The battle of Magnesia - p. 62: Manuel Komnenus - p. 63: The displeasure of the son of Seleucus - p. 64: On the street - p. 65: When they are roused - p. 66: Before the statue of Endymion - p. 67: Gray - p. 68: In a town of Osroene - p. 69: One of their gods - p. 70: Tomb of Iases - p. 71: Passage - p. 72: In the evening - p. 73: For Ammonis, who died at 29 in 610 - p. 74: In the month of Athyr - p. 75: The tomb of Ignatius - p. 76: So much I gazed - p. 77: Days of 1903 - p. 78: The tobacco-shop window - p. 79: Sensual delight - p. 80: Caesarion - p. 81: In harbour - p. 82: Body, remember… - p. 83: The tomb of Lánes - p. 84: Nero’s term - p. 85: The next table - p. 86: Understanding - p. 87: Envoys from Alexandria - p. 88: Since nine o’clock - p. 89: Aristoboulus - p. 91: At the foot of the house - p. 92: Aimilianus Monaê Alexandrian: A.D. 628-655 - p. 93: Of the Hebrews (A.D. 50) - p. 94: To remain - p. 95: Imenus - p. 96: On the ship - p. 97: Of Demetrius Sôtêr, 162-150 B.C. - p. 99: Afternoon sun - p. 100: If dead indeed - p. 101: Anna Comnena - p. 102: For them to come - p. 103: Young men of Sidon (A.D. 400) - p. 104: Darius - p. 106: A Byzantine noble in exile writing verses - p. 107: Favor of Alexander Balas - p. 108: I brought to art - p. 109: Their beginning - p. 110: Demaratus - p. 112: An artisan of wine-mixing bowls - p. 113: Melancholy of Jason, son of Cleander, poet in Commagene, A.D. 595 - p. 114: From the school of the renowned philosopher - p. 115: To Antiochus epiphanes - p. 116: Those who fought for the Achaean league - p. 117: In an old book - p. 118: Epitaph of Antiochus, king of Commagene - p. 119: Julian seeing indifference - p. 120: Theater of Sidon (A.D. 400) - p. 121: In despair - p. 122: Julian in Nicomedeia - p. 123: Before time changes them - p. 124: In Alexandria, 31 B.C. - p. 125: John Cantacuzenus triumphs - p. 126: He came to read - p. 127: By an Italian shore - p. 128: Of colored glass - p. 129: Temethos of Antioch, A.D. 400 - p. 130: Apollonius of Tyana in Rhodes - p. 131: In the monotonous village - p. 132: The 25th year of his life - p. 133: Kleitos’ illness - p. 134: In the taverns - p. 135: Sophist leaving Syria - p. 136: In a township of Asia minor - p. 137: Julian and the people of Antioch - p. 138: A great procession of priests and laymen - p. 139: Priest at the Serapeum - p. 140: Anna Dalassenê - p. 141: Greek since ancient times - p. 42: Days of 1901 - p. 143: Two young men 23 to 24 - p. 144: Days of 1896 - p. 145: A young man skilled in the art of the word - p. 146: In a famous Greek colony, 200 B.C. - p. 148: Picture of a 23-year-old youth painted by his friend of the same age, an amateur - p. 149: Understood not - p. 150: Cimon, son of Learchus, A 22-year-old student of Greek letters (in Cyrene) - p. 151: In Sparta - p. 152: Days of 1909, 1910, 1911 - p. 153: A sovereign from western Libya - p. 154: On the march to Sinope - p. 155: Myres: Alexandria, A.D. 340 - p. 158: In the same space - p. 159: Alexander Jannaius and Alexandra - p. 160: Come, o king of the Lacedaemonians - p. 161: Beautiful flowers and white that became him well - p. 162: He asked about the quality - p. 163: They should have cared - p. 165: The mirror in the hall - p. 166: According to ancient formulas of Grecosyrian magi - p. 167: In the year 200 B.C. - p. 169: Days of 1908 - p. 170: In the suburbs of Antioch - p.175: When, my friends, I was in love - p.176: Your lovely world - p. 177: Bacchic - p. 178: A love - p. 181: The poet and the muse - p. 182: Builders - p. 183: The word and silence - p. 184: Sham-El-Nessim - p. 186: Singer - p. 187: Vulnerant omnes, ultima necat - p. 188: Good and bad weather - p. 189: Elegy pf the flowers - p. 190: Melancholy hours - p. 190: To the moon - p. 191: The inkwell - p. 192: Athena’s vote - p. 194: Timolaos the Syracusan - p. 196: Oedipus - p. 197: By the open window - p. 198: Ode and elegy of the roads - p. 198: In the house of the soul - p. 199: There is blessed joy - p. 199: Our dearest white youth - p. 200: Addition - p. 200: The bank of the future - p. 201: Death of the Emperor Tacitus - p. 202: The tears of Phaeton’s sisters - p. 204: Ancient tragedy - p. 206: Horace in Athens - p. 207: Voice from the sea - p. 209: Intervention of the gods - p. 210: Artificial flowers - p. 211: Biographical note - p. 218: Notes - p. 233: Bibliography
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